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Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1870), 1877-08-08

Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1870), 1877-08-08 page 1

Irnrrtml VOL. XXXVIII. COLUMBUS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1877. NO. 189. SIEBERT k ULLEYi BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURERS. l'rlnters.Blnders, Stationers and Legal.BIank Publisher. BOOK BINDING Of every Description, by the Edition of Optira Hsuse ap4 Building '(Up Stain), COLUMBUS. GEO. T.nUVAZL, MERCHANT TAILOR 157 SOUTH HIGH ST., aug!7 ly lp MQODIE, HUBBARD& CO. .BANKERS, 61 SOUTH HIGH STREET. jy9 t In BY TELEGRAPH TO THE OHIO STATS JOURNAL FOREIGN. lattJmtntaL Uflicei High, Pearl aul Chapel 8t. J M. COMIT. w. rKAHOiioo. COMLY & FRANCISCO, PUBLISHERS AND PSOPBUTOBfl. JAMES HI. COHXY. .... Editor. OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY Indications for Tennessee and Ohio Val ley and the Lake Region Stationary or rising barometer; westerly winds; slight changes in temperature, and partly cloudy ueather. Gold closed in New York yesterday at 106f. ' The Maine Republican Covention will lie held at Augusta to-morrow. At a meeting of the Republican State Executive committee yesterday the preliminary work of the campaign received attention. Judge West, Senator Matthews and other prominent Republicans, be sides the members of the committee, were in the city. The opportunity to meet the candidate for Qovernor was freely embraced by citizens. The meeting was highly encouraging. Its work may be stated briefly. The campaign will be opened by the Republicans at Athens on the 25th inst., with Judge "West, General Garfield and Senator Matthews as speakers. A Beries of meetings to be held thereafter will be announced in due time. It is understood that previous to the formal opening of the campaign Judge West will addreBS his neighbors at Beliefon taine. Judge West and the Colored Voter The Cincinnati Times publishes the following letter : Columbus, August 2. Judge Wm. H. West, BellefonUloe, O : DEAR Sib: Permit me to congratu late vou on the distinguished honor ol having received the nomination of the Republican party for Governor of Ohio, and the party itsell on ine wisaom ais' nlovpil bv delegates in making that nonv ination. With itB brilliant record, and led on by one who was conspicuous in making that record, there is every reason why all who ever voted the Republican ticket, or desired tne perpetuation 01 m li;' . !i u...,M ; . puuuuau prinipeo, buuuw vigorous support in the coming election. I need not asaure you, dear sir, that your effective service in the furtherance of all the great measures of human freedom championed by the Republican party, is held in grateful remembrance, and that you may rely upon the fifteen thousand colored voters of Ohio as solid for yourself this fall. Respectfully, Jab. Poindextib. Review of tne Brltl.li Grata Trade. London, August 7. The Mark Lane Express, in the usual weekly review of the British corn trade, says : ' Wheat may now be considered to have reached maturity, and in some southern districts harvesting has commenced. The crops of wheat, barley and oats in tbe fens art heavy, but badly laid by rain, and almost everywhere the fields have a more or less dingy appearance which be tokens blight; but the harvest is now so near that nothing short of a disastrous changa of weather, whioh is very unlike ly, can influence to any extent tne yield of English wheat, which most probably will be short of the average crop, although not so disappointing as last year's. After a lengthened period of healthy activity our market for wheat the past week has shown signs of depression consequent upon finer weather and tbe temporary quietude which pervades the political situation, so far as this country is concerned. With a prospect of speedy increase in supplies, English millers have bought foreign wheat very sparingly. Imports into London continue liberal, the quantity reported up to Friday being 57,000 quarters. An increased export movement has been going on from Ainer ica, and unless reports of the new wheat crop are exaggerated, both India and Russia will find her a formidable rival for the supply of this country's requirement. Supplies which are pushed forward in autumn are likely to be heavy this year, aurmnlallv as our ranee of prices is not sufficiently low to exercise any restrain,! ing influence, ana there is not muco chance of ths continent relieving us, as according to all accounts France will have sufficient for her own wants and buLlit-tl tn snare for ours, while the wheat crops of Germany and Russia promise abundantly. The tone of onr local, trade has been depressed, and prices have receded one shilling on both English and foreign wheat. xne reeling w porn, " nd, has shown great steadiness, and barley B.d maize nave sold 6d. higher, the scarcity pf the forrser Tiay. ing strengthened prices The pate trade is also steady, in the hoe r and no rednotion has k.on fminri nsTHuarv to effect sales. The floating cargo trade for wheat is very stagnant, and although holders have ex-hihitsri nnnaiderable tenacity bids made have indicated a decline of one shilling in . ahillinm nn the week. Maize, al though steady, has barely maintained the lata Bilvtnrj). Sales of English wheat noted last week ur 91134 Quarters at 64s. 6d.. against 1829 quarters at 47s. 6d. the previous year. Imports into the Kingdom for tne week ending July zs, zio.iwa cwt. wueai 95,345 owt. flour. The Porte Recounts tbe Horrible Haasasres. London, Aug. 7. The Porte has iasned a circular recounting the horrible massacres perpetrated by the Cossacks inrf Bulgarians, xnese inciuae me uunr ing alive of seventy Mussulmans of the village ot Ayultiemi, ana me coia dioou ed massacre of forty others as well ss wo men and children. ihe circular declares that the English military attache has as. certained the truth of the allegations. Turks Threatening; a Town In The. saly. Athens, Aug. 7. Many villages in the district of Volo have refused to pay taxeB. The Turks have placed six guns before tbe gates of - V olo, and threaten to Dom hard the town on the first sign of insur rection. Great uneasiness prevails in Thessaly and Epirius. Bnsslan Defeat Near Ardanan Constantinople. Aug. 7. Mukhtar date of August as follows: One thousand Karapack horsemen defeated two Russian banal' ions, with three guns, at Demiricapon near Ardanan. Emperor William. Salzburg, Aug. 7. The Emperor Willinm hax arrived here. He eoes to Iachl to-morrow to meet the Emperor of Austria. General Grant, Bellaqee. Italy. August 7. Ex (. Grant and Dartv arrived day. A grand fete has been given In their honor. Congratulatory Address. Rome. Aue. 7. American residents have sent a congratulatory address to ex President Grant. Tribute to the Forte. Belgrade. Aub. 7. The Skuptschina, before prorogation, decided to continue payment of tribute to the Porte. insured for $4500 in the Amazon and two other companies. JJayton, Aug. 7. About midnigniiaei evening tbe barn of John W. 'iurner, four miles from the city, took fire by some unknown means and was bnrned to the ground. The building had just been completed at an expense of three thousand dollars. It was filled with crops amounting to several thousand dollars, all of whioh. was destroyed, ine totai loss will not be less than five thousand dol- ars, on which there was no insurance. Chicaoo, Aug. 7. The Inter-Ocean's Green Bay special says the reports of ravages of the fire at Eaton, Missouri, have been overdrawn. Over thirty families have been burned out, and in many instances entire crops destroyed. The loss is estimated at $13,000. No lives lost. WASHINGTON. the EX SECRETARY ROBESON. WiatmsnTnv. Ancr. 7. Hon. George Robeson instituted a replevin suit in Supreme Court of the lnstrlcl ol Columbia yesterday, to retake from a county constable ten rolls of newspaper, such as is used upon a Bullock press, which it is understood had been seized on an execution as property of the proprietors of the National Republican paper. is valued at two hundred dollars. Ihis the first occasion on which Robeson has taken any public step showing his connection with the publication of the National Republican newspaper, although that connection has been imputed to him for some time. EXPORTS AND IMPORTS. Returns from all customs districts of all exports and imports during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1877, show total exports specie values of $602,474,681; total imports 041,3UY,04h; excess oi exports over imports $151,107,032. In the seal year 18V 0, tne excess oi exports over imports was but $79,643,481. In tbe fiscal year 1877 exports of coin and bullion amonnted to $56,183,237, and the Imports to $40,774,414, whil in the preceding year the exports amounted to $56,606,302, and imports to only $16,- 30,oai. TEMPERANCE. At a meeting of the Mrs. R. B. Hayes Temperance Society last night a resolu tion waa adopted expressing priae ana Base Ball, Special to the Ohio Sts'.e Jouru-! Wheeling, W. Va., Aug. 7. The Bunkeves auain defeated the Standards here to day by hard bitting and good base running, Kellj, their new catcher, leading at the bat. The nlaving of Burke, Hulli van and Xellv was especially fine. The Buckeyes play at Allegheny to-morrow. Below 1b the score : CRIME AND CASUALTY. Two Furious and Fatal Fights la Kentucky. Louisville, Aug. 7. A special dispatch to the Courier-Journal, dated Bar-rodsburg, Kentucky, says: News has reached here to-day of two serious shooting affrays that occurred yesterday in the edge of Washington county, and near the Mercer line. Maxville was the scene of one difficulty, in which John Sutterfield shot and killed John Butler, a man of family. The fatal termination of this affair waa tbs result of a previous difficulty over a sack of flour, Sutterfield being a miller. Gardner's store, near Millersburg, was where the other fight occurred, in wbich several, families took part, and which was the renewal of a former fracas. Several of the Royalty, Gardners, Cases and Sheridans were participants in the affray. Ooe man, . Sheridan, was shot through the head and killed outright. Gardner was shot in the arm, and one Case in tbe wrist. Twenty or thirty shots were fired, and probably others were wounded, whose names I could not learn. L. S. Brown, who was shot yesterday in this county, was wounded in five different places, every fire from the revolver taking effect in his body. The boy Smith, who did the shooting, is still at large. Fatal Jtesult of a Quarrel Ingan Francisco. San Feancibco, August 7. John E. Daily, a stock broker, was shot and killed to-day by Leslie C. Hanks, ConBul General for Guatemala, in this city. The trouble grew out of a trifling disagreement last Saturday between Hanks and Emil Kuranda, Daily's partner. Daily took up the quarrel yesterday and worsted Hanks in a personal faulteir in the sum of $3555. He has no bondsmen and no property. The Police Commissioners of Chicago favor almost unanimously an increase of the city's police force by the addition of 200 men, 100 to be mounted. Edward Cook has been appointed re. ceiver for the Protective Life Insurance company at Chicago, and tbe company has been enjoined ironi transacting fur ther business. ' Graver's escape was evidently a pretty narrow one. A correspondent or tbe via clnnati Gazette who attended the entire investigation, comes to the conclusion that there .was money used in Graver's election, but it was not found that he had a band in using it. He says the popular feeling in Oregon is that the case has a bad look. That is about the state of popular feeling on the subject everywhere. The Syracuse Courier of Thursday morning says : "Frank Walworth, the parricide, who received a pardon from Governor Ribinson yesterday, arrived in this city from Auburn thla morning at one o'clock, in company with his mother, who has devoted herself since his incarceration to freeing her unfortunate son from a terrible fate, wbich befell him on her account. Together they eat in the waiting-room at the Central depot, until the arrival of the St. Louis express, which they boarded and departed for Albany at two o'clock. Happily, very few persons knew of their presence, hence they were spared the pain and mortification of being made a publio show of. Walworth came out of prison last evening and was received into a carriage at the gates by his mother. They drove across to the depot, and, without alighting waited for the train, which brought them to in a personal en. e-"" r -; ;, counter. Bystanders state that Hanks Bu iuiuw approached Daily from behind and w convince one that his pardon is an act shot him without warning. Hanks of the V humanity, if not also of the claims that Daily approached him mBt ct J"8.'1"6- His hair has grown threateningly with a heavy cane, and he IoDB ,Blnoe., hl .P'?1".0',. confinement, fired in self-defense. Hanks is in confine- 8na . ows " to lau in neavy iocks ,, ..I,;.. ...n,!..,;.. n.;i ... upon his BhoulderB. lie was dressed formerly a broker of New York. He has a family at New Haven. Hanks was formerly a member of the shipping firm of J. C. Merrill & Co. Both occupied a high social position, and were in easy circumstances.Desperadoes Interfering with Unit ed States Officers. Memphis, Tenn., Aug. 7. On laBt . " . " ..... . - I iun.ro satisfaction that tbe lady whose name me t,.;. Ti0r,i TTn;t to.no - . , r . . , i: iiuaj bask ail) .sclus. j w uanvu wtHns uu - society bears is lp no way responsible for and 7eebhi were Bent by furnishing a basket of flowerB to the Qeneral person, Collector for this dis- Schutzenfest, and therefore sees no good tpjot, to seize tbe tobaceo faotory of John reason for a change of its adopted alma A Bnrtoni in Henry oounty, Tennessee, mater. flom twenty miles north of Paris. They THE INDIANS. had two men and the driver of the wagon Immediately after the session of the with them, and seized the factory and be- Cabinet to-day President Hayes issued a gan loading the machinery on the wagon, general order prohibiting the sale of arms wnen suuaeniy iuey were nurrouuueu u n, ammunition to the Indians, and re- twentyfive armed men and ordered to un- all llran.i tn ti.iilo mit.h them in load the wagon some oi ine aeBperauoes Turkish iron c ads attacked seven xtus. such artioles. Military commandants are insisting on killing tbe oiticers, who were lian gunboats and destroyed two of them. charged with the duty of assisting in the forced to aDanaon me wora ana leave. A Yienna correspondent confirms the exeoution of the order. Verdict of Acquittal In the Fl he report that Austria has concluded the THE 8AMOAN APPLICATION. Jones Harder Case. financial arrangements necessary for a Fin,, n.u-.t f j..mn.M.( hnf in.it Chicago, Aug. 7. In the trial of Piof. partial mobilization. The total amount VdWiripn W "J xuuoiuvAWH, . I TV1 U .i1aa nf Q fl Tnnao -F thfl I i J ' - no Anf AAft a ' .- no action, awaiting fuller information, of ""V' 'If X T',-"? oorroweu isoo.vuo uonus, . i i hs imn rni nnnnniRHi .iiiurnni in ititifuii i mi ion of the Bamoan uovern- ""-e;- ..:.' iTt. 7f... AwA . i here is si plainly and spoke but little to his mother, who remained: with him and attended to his little wants with untiring devotion." Foreign. A Bucharest correspondent reports much Bickness in the Russian army on the Dobrudscha. The amount of bullion withdrawn from the Bank of England on balance yesterday was 40,000. The first installment of reinforcements for Cuba, one thousand men, will leave Spain on tbe 15th of August. A dispatch from Yienna says the formation of the Russian landwher has been found to be deficient, owing to a great want of organization. A dispatch from Constantinople says in a naval engagement on Sulind river the Life on the Sandwich Islands. Iy a squad of ill-disposed persons attempt ed to "Bulldoze" guards by firing pistols and other intimidating proceedings, ine guards, however, stood their ground like brave men, and dehed these "Bulldozers." Just as we commenced to get quieted down and allay the bad blood which has come to the surface for the past few days, there appears on the stage of excitement another agitator in the person of one of our most distinguished ministers. Last Sunday evening his discourse related to the strikers and workingmen generally, which was considered to be extremely inflammatory and entirely out of place at tbe Dresent time. He handled the rail road magnates in a free handed manner and bespoke for them the most unenviable place in tba world to come. : The all absorbing topic of tbe day is the Herein trial, and a curious anxiety to know how it will terminate. The plea of Insanity is going to be strongly urged by bis counsel. Ine examination of witnesses will take several days and the end is patiently waited for. The universaiist camp meeting, wnicn is being held near Mt. Liberty, is largely attended, and young folks are having huge times. Concerts at Delaware. Delaware, August 6, To the Editor of the Ohio Stats Journal : The closing concerts of Delaware Nor mal Music School will occur Thursday and Friday evenings of this week, The first will be a miscellaneous concert, at which tbe leading soloiBts will take part. At the second Haydn's sublime Oratorio, Creation, will be given, with a chorus of Beventy. Future Beat of Catholicism. The imnression prevails very exten sively that Palestine is to be re-peopled with .Israelites who are now scattered abroad in all lands and that a large emigration of this people thitherward has set in. Home authorities declare even that the population of Palestine to-day is double what it was ten years ago. If this refers to the Jews the Rev, Dr. De Hass, who has been United States Consul at Jerusalem for seven or eight years, writes to the Christian Advocate to say that it may be true, but of the entire population it is not true. The country, di;Trth7aKodie:d men to tap f fift. b" f English i, Tn.n.k .,,. -.n:ni, seamen who Bhould be so unfortunate as to HONOLULU. Interesting Letter from m "Press" Correspondent Progress ot Civilization No Cannibals or Heathens Mow; Influence or commercial Intercourse Intelligent Hands Wanted 1 he C limate, Expenses of Living, Ele. Correspondence ol the Philadelphia Press. Honolulu, July 18. Thirteen weeks have passed since the craft which bore us from San Francisco was moored in the harbor of Honolulu,, and yet I have not been able to find the moment when I could send you a brief mention of "What I know about the Sandwich Islands." It is astonishing to realize how little we know of a foreign land before we have a residence there 1 And I verily believe there is no BPot on earth of wbich so lit 'e true knowledge exists in other lands this little dot of land in the midst of the surging billows of the Pacific ocean. Many of tbe foreign residents here are English or American, and hold frequent correspondence with friends in the old homes. Vessels' arrive at this port every day. A British mail steamer plying between Australia and San Fran cisco stops here on the trip each way, making two steamers per month at our wharf. Jn tbe harbor there is always a man-of-war of some foreign nation, and generally more than one. Every nation, kindred, and tribe on earth seems to be represented in the motley crowd that stands upon tbe wharf when the steamer touches here, and yet we can scarcely scan the "special correspondence" of an fing lish or American paper that does not con tain some outlandish ideas concerning tbe people of the Sandwich Islands. A recent writer in the Saturday Review speaks of the people of Honolulu as "lounging Kanakas, half-civilized by Massachusetts missions." Surely, thoee who have seen the Dowager Queen Emma, or His Majesty, the reigning King Kalakaua, would never regard them as members of a half-civilized race. Still later, some one gave an account of the rage of the Sandwich Islanders toward a ship's crew who had com mitted some outrage, and anticipated the fruit makes it but a slight expense. The water is so soft that the foulest washings can be completed at the brookside without tub or boiler. Ironing is done by. heaters that carry their own fire of cbarooal. During three months of housekeeping here my outlay for fuel aud lights has been less than four dollars 1 As I have a carpenter and a school teacher to feed it can readily be understood that we did not live on raw apples and Graham "gems." I would like to tell yoa how these peo ple seem to me, with all their native kindness and courtesy; what wonders of scenery there are; what luxuriance of vegetation; what curiosities of social life, but I forbear till some other time.; Suffice it, there is everything to make up a strangely curious study for the philanthropist, or even the ordinary student of human nature. M. M. R. LAND OF THE MIDNIGHT SUN. Within the Arctle Clrele Peculiarities or the Xorweglan Coast and of the People. . , the applicatii a some want of provisions among m.nt to the President of the United '""i""" 4. J . r. " jr troops between Bistova ana iirnova on " . . ...I nnHH.n. f DM 11TI. nn 1 11 H DTnilllll 111 - . . . . . treat Britain lor u,y; "V "" T ';Z w crount oi tne difficulty in up tbe Turkish army, is rapidly being depopulated and lmpoverien- ed. Deserted villages are every where to be Been. There is less wealth among the people, fewer camels, horses and stock of all kinds than ten years ago. Fruit and forest trees are also disappearing. Carmel was almost stripped of her timber for the Suez canal, and as any fruit tree is taxed, whether it bears or not, few are now planted. Everything there appears to be finished. There is no progress, no improvement of any kind. There are about thirty thousand jews in an Palestine. They are mOBtly from Russia, and do not go there to work or develop the oountrv. but to die. that they may sleeD with their fathers in holy ground. They are generally aged and poor, living on the charity of their people in Europe . . , .1 . n r f 1 . TJI.t- VBrUtUb Ul H.l.Mll.Hl WW inn I . .U- .1 : II. 1 1 n I- nmniiMnn Btaies ana me Hueea m urea . . p d .howinw that . "V"""".. " T'XI nroteet on and assistance to enable tnem . 7V i il . r 7u wagons to transport supplies Deyonu we rmaintain"heir peace and independence. ae'a hff?fe, WJ? ft. & depots along the Roumanian side of the .r j . T. r" iTi.v river. setts, buuu. iiib.upmov'"vu a j:..k e tj.i: .... h. -Rm. III- TlnH Ultra woo KAnionilcul rrt -.oil uisiiiv,u uuui Mgiiiu sksth w to await transportation to an fctaSKwS ' " . . . I nnnforennA van verw imimrtant. The A Mavage SoniH , u nr., Be. Wilh.lm ,.! t;.t.mmlnlltv Nw Yohk. Aue. 7. Mrs. Frank ' f 'u trimn n,a. ftllw anaanltmi bv Henrv The Roval Victoria victualling yard Clark, a rejected lover, at her residence in at Deptford is still busy replenishing Tarinfllntl ft VAT) IIP last aTeninsr. Clark stores which have lately been drawn upon Soldiers Acquitted or Blame. . , . WRt.nm i0- her for weekBi anu jn order to provision the garrisons at Reading. Pa.. Aug. 7. The Coro- waa .ntarinnr thn hniiHA last evening Gibraltar and Malta, in each of which ner's inrv in the case of the recent riots k. tt.t.j nor iih . hatchet, cutting there is now accumulated food sufficient rendered a verdict io-oay acquitting me aye terrible gaBhes in her head, soldiers composing the ourin regiment Mygterloq, murder of a Physician. rom any oiauie lur ur.ug uu '" T HAUTE. InD Aug. 7 Dr. J, TaKing into consideration ne .ear.u. pen. ArmBtrn 'leading pbvsician. was in which they were placed, ii any . . n,Th .h,h of . , , - .1 . .In.n m.UL (.111. Ii.i.n. . -. . OUBTAILTNG MR I.O. The Cabinet to-day authorized an or- dr prohibiting the sale of arms to In dians, and the order was soon afterward issued. POSTMASTER APPOINTED. Pa's ! P. Perlev has been appointed PoBtmaster at Henry, MarBhall county, Illinois. for the maintenance of a large army for twelve months. ZANESVILLE. I AlUIUHi. I -j and America. It will require a different """""j clasB of emigrants altogether, says the Doctor, to recover this cursed land, it ib true there are new houBes going up outside the citv walls, but mostly small tene. mente. built bv committees for the benefit of their poor members. Work has haB been done on those dwellings by night to avoid the hot sun during the day, and not because there is sucn a demand for houses as has been reported. The latent crogramme for Palestine is not Jewish, but Papal occupancy. The Jesuits of Europe, adds Dr. De Hass, are dissatisfied with the condition of things in touch these shores I The writer, a corre spondent of the London Times, dilates upon the catastrophe that would follow the recognition of an English crew by these excited "cannibal islanders." What expressions to be sent forth of a land whose noble, lovely daughters are the wives of men equally worthy of their own native English, Scotch, or American soil I These things are amusing, very; but especially so when read in the magnificent reading and library rooms of tbe Hawaiian Upvernment, among a collec tion of the choicest literature of the whole world, which has been gathered for the enjoyment of a people known outside of their island Eden as "cannibals" and "heathen I" These people . have been strangely misrepre. the resources of their country concealed, the prosperity of their Jung. dom denied. .Bigotry at home has gen erously supplied Borrosboola-Gba flannel to these "heathens." and it has been lavishly distributed by parties sporting the uniform of apostolic teachers, but they have exacted large returns to their own private coffers for their share in the distribution, and they have strenuously labored to keep the fountains of wealth plugged up to all but their own selfish clique. Honest travelers, who would have told the truth, have been seized as soon as tbey touched the sou, and, imagining - me . uTi.a k n T Br ' S this place at 9 o'clock to-night, ,t mus be borne, b,'GeneralIBoito. who P. from tQ a bility for the terrible tragedy is directly e"l He wsb J .1 .k . T?,li The, roannnoi. reluming iruui o Yin., .u - uint. u. . ...iS. , At th . hour the causa ol tbe ...,ik.H n kn. whn nnmnnseil the 'UM " -J""' Departure of tbe Knights for LancasterThe Home ol Ureal Hen-Local miscellany. lawless body who were instigating the riotous proceedings, and the moo is primiarily responsible for all subsequent trouble and oiooosneo. Mexican Filibusters Arrested. Galveston, Aug. 7. The News's San Antonio special says : Lieutenant Bullis crossed the Rio Grande on the 4tb, re captured five stolen horseB, and returned . n. - . , r . i. ir.:.. the Texas siae. un tne uin juojoi Zanesville, Aug. 7, To the Editor of the Ohio Stats Journal : The Knights have shipped their horses and departed for Lancaster, in order to have a preparatory tilt this afternoon, Tbe Knights are composed of the best i in- j ,, i ..j .1.. Italy, and there is a movement on foot to nTs" ' make Jerusalem tbe head oi me iiaun :r-. .. . , n.:..:. - k k .n. by their "generous entertainers," and cuuruu. vuuiuim.uuc.a -r" i" .:,. Ill..u . .k km .,.. nninioHtnn.untin.ia for tha territory: """" . , - j .tt!i-0j fMm tnai nave ueen reau oy mous&uus wuoae engiu.. nao i.,,u - "r hparta ache a. thought riRa of thoaa who ""lm.kiJLmTy.gZ;. have given up all the attractions of m f: p 'S . aMnTnTzion hme civilization to spread light V'T". .T.r""T", rif..V. among the "Is ands of the Sea." But V. JB"ir.? . .k! I""":" n new e?a has dawned. Commercial inter oe irauBierreu, xubfb uu I,...;... . ...uiiinni. .1 T If 1 . 1 . . . . 1 1 . .1 1 11.. 1 1 1 I WUinO UD KHEU l UU. 1U1.U1... .V - nus ia is to ue inataueu, uuu mo , -, . , , ol the Great King" is to be the future U8 i " ?ou,u . f .T. 115 r tha Pontifical He. Russia, how- hypocrisy are ro ling bapk before the sun I r" k. .nm.thinc, to aav on the o true Md intelligent influences, future disposition of Palestine. The Chatauaua Assemblv n r . n mi n i I to rATRPOINT, n. I., AUg. aub nrai --,-, , . . ,, f(n. Vln filli.l . ' exercise to-day was an admirable address """""'rr v.w7, Mm,i Jom gentlemen ol Sinesvuie, and en. on Manners, delivered by jxiisb Mras T . ,t . .... (a.ned couraged as they are by tbe courteous Huntington Miller, ot Vn.lcsK: , l, 11 f, ki .Mt. but he escaDed. Escobedo efforts and genial attention of the promi- o'clock John B.Uough delivered ms iec- Loredo, without funds, nent people of Lancaster, they feel they ture on Eloquence and Orators to a large " P J ; m -w the nobleat exhibition of valor- A Good for Something Missionary The following little story, from the New York Evangelist, will interest a large number of our citizens: come people think that a missionary is good for nothing but to preach to the heathen, and maims -preacuiug IB ';" n nm it nn Hrnlinnnf thdir goodish" talk which a lay brother or audience. At 2 o'clock Rev. W. W, Ramsey, of Kentucky, presided over the Second Church conference in the pavilion, and brief addresses were delivered SSLS tbe accounted for in part by the fact hohl Assembly will open to-night. Twins to Governor Pilchard. ous dexterity ever witnessed in this sec New Orleans, Aug. 7. Ex-Governor tion, and assisted by the gifted oratory of Packard, in an interview to-day said Honorables ihomas awing and unariee thai his sudden return to this city Martin, the spectacle will be grand to be .:nk Via aii.nntoH fnr in nart. hv the fact I hold. that Mrs. Packard to-day presented him The Ministerial Association of the with twins, boys, weighing eleven pounas ,jnesviieiioiriui, m. vuu.ui,o . .u each. BY MAIL AND TELEGRAPH. STAtiDABDS. R. A.I'O.E.Bh. Workingmen Who Didn't Strike. A correspondent of the Christian Union tells of a better way than striking : "A gardener has worked on our place ever since 1866, eleven years. During that time his wages have never been over $2 a day, and that only in high times; it ranged from $1.65 down; the.most of the time it wan 1.25. His wife had no income. and did no work except to take care of the children and the house, and he had no income but his wages. But during that time he kept his wife and children com fortably, fed them well, so that they were always healthy, and dressed them so that thev went to day and Sunday school, al ways neatly dressed: kept a cow; and saved out of his earnings enough to buy two lota, and build a house and a stable. He saved the S1800 with which he did this in the first eight years. I do not know that he has Baved anything dur- jg the last three years. But be never dra.B or used tobacco. He was a Protestant Irishman, During the same time we had a co.tphman who had from $2 to $2 50 a day; drank and smoked; owed everybody; never saved a cent; and, finally, when he left, had to borrow money to get out of town." George Ellington in the Brooklyn Eagle tells what a single man did one dav in New York with one dollar. He got a shave, breakfast, a paper collar, a pack of cigarettes, attended a concert, had lunch, beer, dinner for two, consisting of soup, fish, macaroni with cheese, beefsteak, apples and peanuts, treated himself and friend to a glass of beer, got lodgings for the night, and a cup of coffee in the morning. - The suit of the Government against William Mc&ee it set for th third Mod day In September, Lane 0 1 a Muflet. 0 J Veuum 0 1 II Ulasscook 0 Hagan 1 i Barkley 0 2 J HOOIDSOQ . " I.nkena 1 0 2 Wilkinson l 9 16 Totals . ,.,4 19 27 4 4 Following the Hostile Indians, Helena, Montana, Aug. 7. Advices from Missoula to the morning of the 6th Bay Gibbon, with one hundred regulars, infantry, in wagons, left Missoula post to follow the hostiles. at one o'clock Satur day afternoon. Hedesigned making thirty-five miles a dav. The hostileB were at TViotlttla Ranch on Friday night, seven tvfive miles from Missoula, and within J .. ... ,1 TT 1 ten miles oi tne trail to xvoss cluih. Receiver Appointed. St. Lotus. August 7. Judge Gotts- ohalk. of the Circuit Court, this after- throughout Central New York noon appointed L, E. Alexander, former- je American Dental Association 1b in ly CaBhier of the Mercantile iana, re- 8e8,ion at Chicago, with a large attend' ceiver oi me voiumuia uuw iuomauw enmrmnv. in this citv. that institution having been declared insolvent. There were heavy rains in California on Friday. ATroy (N. Y.) firm ships horse cars to Bombay. Tbe Canadians are confidently erpect- imr a. bountiful harvest. Australians talk of planting oyster beds and Tommy Hendricks, have to wander on a very extensive scale. from the old home and make known their Wheat is yielding unexpectedly well M " " r ...,.h-i i m. t,mi i nav l r it i .-- . . . , minds, whether the learned M.l. Houtuard session atfthe South Street Church, with a good attendance from neighboring cities. The coal miners of (bia vicinity will organize a Union to-night. Good wages have been agreed upon, but tbe diggers feel they must talk the labor question over tnaether. Some one has discovered that J udge Johnson is an old Muskicsumite. Mus-bmffnm soil is Droduotive of wise and great souls; but they all, like Sammy Cox . m II 1 ' 1 . I -. .I,.- BUOKEYIB. ft. A.PO.E.bh. Burke 0 8 12 0 Pabor 1 0 0 0 0 Callahan 0 0 0 0 0 Sullivan I 0 16 0 2 Kelley ' ? Htrlel. 1 1 1 I I Spence .0 i 2 0 0 McUormiok 0 a 1 a 0 Welch 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 20 27 T 7 Runs earned Buckeyes 8; Standardi 1. Fire Becord. New York, Aug. 7. The Brooklyn oil works at Green Point were partially destroyed bv fire last night. Losa $100,- 000: fully insured. These works were known as the Stokes oil works, and there has been much litigation over them re- iwntlv. Green Bat, Wis., Aug. 7. A special sayB : The farm village of Eaton, Brown county. Wisconsin, about fifteen miles east of this city, was totally destroyed by fire. The forest has been burning for five weeks, the fire extending many miles In n direction, destroying many mill ion feet of timber and thousands of dol lars in other property. Home twentyhve families were burned out in Eaton, los: vervthlng thev possessed. A large num ber of animals were roasted alive, une family is stated to have perished in the lames and four other entire families are missing. Great suflerlng exists among tbe homeless people. Cincinnati, Aug. 7. Longley & Co.'i printing establishment, as Foster's, Ohio, was burned last sight, Loss $16,000; Trotting at Bochester. Rochester, Aug. 7. The race for the ance. Ex-Governor Letcher has been nom- . .. r. rw l inated tor tbe Virginia aouae oi.ueie-gates. Charles G. Martin, a broker. No. 2d4 won't soon have to take up his bag and hunt a broader field, The farmers are entering complaints against the dry spell, which promises them a little trouble. I 7 -.r .' , . .. , -ti; 2:34 class was won by Hannis, in three faflwey, flew i ora, nas laueo; uaDiu-straight heats. B;st time, 2:24J. White ties $80,000. n . . .... , i - . I ... I t ! 1 1. Tr;.... ..;(. Stockings won in the ciass, suiver- iihuobibkiwhiw." uu.yc.o.v eideB taklug the first and Lady Snell the of Mississippi next year. The State sup- fourth heat. Time, ZM, mit, sues tne iunas, 2:24, 2::24. The Wisconsin Republican State Con- ! vention is to be held in Madison on X ues- Dental Association. dav. September 11. Chioaqo. Aug. 7. The Dental Asso- u . i n.r.p atnl. C9D from ciation reassembled this afternoon t a Harvard boy's coat while it was hang- mree o ciocs;. va mouuu, n the college boat-houBe, on Charles of Iowa, read a lengthy paper; Bubjeot : nn Fridayi "Is tbe dental pulp essential to the integ rity of the dental structure?" lhe pa per waa accepted and discussed. The first bale of the new crop of cotton was received at Savannah yesterday from Florida and sold at auction for twelve cents per pound. Brazil is buying railroad Iron, locomotives and horse car materials of us, and The Bergen Trial at Mt. Vernon Special to the Ohio State Journal. Mt. Vernon, O., Aug. 7. Court in the Bergen case convened again this morning at nine o'clock. The usual large orowd of spectators was present. The State re sumed the examination of witnesses, seV' eral of whom testified to Bergen's having exnressed an enmity toward McBride prior to the commission of the deed. At noon the State rested their examination in chief. In the afternoon the defense examined several witnesses, among this number several physicians, who gave their opinions on the insanity question. Numerous affidavits were also introduced showing insanity in the family. William Bergen, the father of the defendant, was examined at some length, giving a nisio The Rochester Union makes the following extracts from a private letter dated at Tromsoe, Norway, July 3 : "We steamed, into this pretty Arctic town night before last, and shall make our home here a week longer, while a portion of the party finish their northern trip around North Cape to Vadsce. We crossed the mountains by means of horses and carriages, using 120 for our ride of 200 miles. The law requires every stationfrom six to ten miles apart to furnish travelers fresh horses within half an hour of their arrival. We are now two days into the Arctio Circle, and where we now live the sun shines brightly at midnight from May 20 to July 22. Even two days before reaching this point the sun was so strong at midnight that the ladies , wanted shades. This coast is perfectly beautiful, or, I should have said, grand, as well as wonderful. For nearly two thousand miles the islands are bo thick so close together that it is like sailing up a river which expands into lakes. The whole distance is overshadowed with snow-capped mountains from 8000 to 6000 feet in height, rising abruptly from tbe water, while in the distance are to be seen those which are much higher. We were exposed only once or twice to tbe open sea, and then only two or three hours at a time. The air here is very exhilarating. Yesterday the children picked wild uowers as we were walking. and within a few feet made snow balls. It is a wonder that in so short a season anything cau be grown in tbis latitude, and yet grass Borings up rapidly, often grow- " ing an in.'h in twentyfour hours. They have but two seasons really ten months ef winter and two of summer. Although the season 1 so lo jg yet tbe feords never freeze, and I think we often have as cold weather in New York. The occupation of the place is fishing, mostly herring and codhsh. All are well to do; no rich and no poor. Abe people are intelligent, the masses receiving a fair education. sut what a queer place and what queer customs 1 From the belfrey of the church between the hours of 8 at night and 6 a. m. a man shouts the time of night through a large tin horn at intervals of every half hour. The clergymen wear large, wide rufls. We have just been to see the Laps, some three or four miles from the town. They were notified the day before , and for a small sum spent the whole day among the mountains gathering their reindeer which they drove down for us to see some four hundred of them in number. It was such a novel sight to see them com- ' ing down the steep mountains. They will not live low down, as they eat only rein deer moss, which grows where it is very cold. Cows will not eat where tbey have been, as tbe scent of the little hair tbey shed is very offensive to them. We go from here to the feords around Molde and Bergen and purpose spending a few weeks . there; from thence we go to Hamburg, through Germany to Geneva, reaching. Nice about the 1st of November. The trip so far has been one of great pleasure. The vast wealth bo long looked up in the rocky-ribbed soil of these islands will now soon be freely circulating through tbe tides of cosmopolitan wealth, -ine recent reciprocity treaty with tbe American Union haB given new vigor to all kinds of business, and everything is looking up," from the humble vendor of poi to the ohief omcera of tbe Jung. , .7. .. . nooie rans to De employed in aany avoca- mthnr weaa guts wouiu mane iu oumwi i .. , . -. . - , ... Z . ka. fnnnrl missionaries I lions as mercnants, snippers, DanaerB, eto. vvuvu. ; il j.o . . i. -r .k. ,-u mnnn mmii Ane iasi Australian man eieaiuer wu.uu n different parte of the world Innch more Excellency menoi anairs tnau iuu uumnw,.. u r, - vt:i. .... f. most laymen, at home. J,oi'i stances oompei m.iu u Pp. . - -f- , Jr - hi. bu8ineBB .nnn AIH. In nam rtnaitintifl- ftnn fieiiCH I . - ' . . r"","'."' . " ,7;i k.l,it of mind being tbe negot ation of means for the lm hey acquire a practical hah t of ",,,, 0f laborers to this Kingdon: Lllt.li .H TCI, UC1CI Ul .U ,uv. nui". times they are placed in unexpected dim milieu, where an ignorant or an unprac tical man would De quite iosi. xue Rev. 8. H. Kellogg, of Pittsburg, who has mat been called to be Professor of Theology at the Seminary at Allegheny, went to India as a missionary a dozen Tears ago. He sailed from xfoBton in a sailing ship. On the third day out tl cautuin was washed overboard in a storm . . . ; . instrument uv wnicu uu Le;r i, take mattered broadcast for the healing of the . '. ' V , V. - , ?. : a- ignorance and superstitions of the na- pi. rectos, g. i P" ' , on(. 8nd trlv become a power. her course nunoreas oi umea auu imgut - - , - . knt have gone to the bottom had not this , , J,9 " UhDT young missionary, then just oui o, ine d f hi seminary, been on board, who took charge . . J and made the oa.iy ooBemuone, "f thia Kindom. The cultivation of su- ngTJ ;hof; voyage Toylon Vh.h Kbecoming the Uading industry of lasted five months, and in wbich the distance traversed was nearly half around Donation of laborers to this iungaom from her Britannic Majesty's dominions. The diplomatic qualifications of tbis gen tleman are, already, well Known in America, through his relations in tbe matter of tbe reciprocity treaty, and if bis present mission De equally Buccessiui there will Boon be felt a mighty power here. Ancient sages transmitted to future I .. .. r .ITT" lJ l On the third day out the "'""j .tM.TnTJ instrument by which knowledge may be Troops Bequlred to Hove n Train. 'Wilmsbabre, Aug. 7. An attempt i ... .. . Wanamin fatlinr. IU U.UVV HJIUV .1 .lug . 1, .u-ui.u ..-... 0 1 i iiyeil .uu umm . . wi.wiiai. ui uo, u i n i a 17 . , owing to th strikers uncoupling tbe en- there is a proopRct that we shall compete ry of his eon and his character in detail nina frnrti tViA Ptro iho Rh.riff want ont L.,no.o.rnUv with tha Fnolluh fnr tlmt im. The court then sdioumed until to-mor- to day with United States troopB, and pnrtant market. row morning. The testimony thus far mere was du luriusr inienereuue. Greenback Heeling 1st Hew York. Albany, Aug. 7. Samuel Q. Rice, chairman of the State Central committee of the Greenback party, has issued a circular inviting friends of that party to meet at Rochester. August zj. The Election In France. Paris. Aug. 7. In obedience to In structions of the Prince Imperial, Baron Houssmann will run for the Chamber of Deputies in Ajjaccia, against Prince Napoleon, 7 . ... 1 ., , . " :j The statement of the Citizens' Fire In- Drou8nl oul ,or lne ae,eD" " um surance company of Newark, whose col- ereu Ter" "01'' t lapse was announced on Monday, shoWB Mt. Wermon Memoranda. a deficit of $61,000. M, vrnon. O.. Aug. 7. The controlling interest in the Queen to ths Editor of the Ohio State Journal : Anne's and Kent raUroad has been pur- The Cleveland, Mt. Vernon and Colum. .d Baltfmo;. railradr ' """" epot at Mt. Liberty was set A large number of men paraded the 9n fire 1m ni8ht. by. .ome PerB0M "a' .tta of Shenandoah Mondav night. "own wno maae tbtlt maVe' the globe. Tom Placlde's Harilage. New lork World.l The story of his marriage was roman. tic, his wife being, as was told yesterday, an early love, whom he had not seen for fortv years, and who had been twice mnrriAd and twice widowed in the mean time. She came to New York and stopped at tbe Union Place Hotel, and while there learned that Tom Pla nide was also in the house. A well known New York lady was with her hen aha learned it. who waa an ac quaintance of Placides also. "Why, T)avi. and the other lady told her that sudden changes from one end of the ther- Placide was in straightened circumstances, mometer to the other; but our summer "Bend him to me, won't you?" said Mrs. lasts all the year round. Still, it never . . . . ' 1 I Art nan n nkas Iha hpasan H - t 1 hoc t if a Davie; "there is no reason "J HT"" T " . V shouldn't spend the rest of our lives Philadelphia August. There are schools . . II I ami! nliiinrini kniui n n A snnis nirnlou Art lift I UDgetuer. x nay. yi.uy -k. Bi.. Whv will neSole ine pleasant message was ibu .u - i , cide, and the couple shortly met and b ay in the squahdnen of overcrowded shortly afterward were married. The cities at the East, when these cocoanut marrURe, as was icaroeiy 10 nava vwu f-..-v. exDected under tne circumaianueB, ww wv,iuH6 - The They were dispersed by the authorities damage was slight, the fire being discov-and fortyseven arrested. ered In time to prevent serious loss. A Meridian, Connecticut, dispatch says Militia are still doing duty guarding evCi'T Collector Frank G, Otis Is a ds-1 the tfautmore ana wwo Bridges. nv these islands, and its returns are immense. Men in every line ot Dusmess are greatly interested, aud capital is ready upon every hand. But, alas I men might starve in the vaults of a mint; and so here, tbe safes and banks may overflow with money, but it avails not till intelligent handscan direct the enginery which shall put it in motion. The Government has, therefore, taken up the matter of securing labor, and we bope soon to have an abundance of help for developing our national resources. There is no reason why white men should not come here. Many Scotch and English men are here working in the foundry or at other trades The climate is warm, but not beyond tbe limits ot life and labor, more is no winter with frost, and ice, and enow; no The Last Cremation. Regarding the cremation of the body of the late Dr. Winslow at Salt Lake, Utah, a special to the Chicago limes says : When Dr. Winslow's remains were placed in the cremation furnace at 6:20 o clock, the body weighed 126 pounds. He died on ths 7th of July, and the body had . been embalmed and the heart and bowels taken ont. The crowd were permitted to view the face as the body lay in a plain . coffin, with flowers strewn on it. Nearly , 1000 persons passed around the coffin rapidly, immediately after which the door of the furnace, wbich had already reached a . red heat, was opened, and tbe body quick ly pushed in on an iron plate, the door closed, and the fireman commenced his work in earnest. The furnace was con structed with double flues,ao that the flames came directly in contact with an envelope above the body, a large current of air being admitted. The first appearance, as seen through the mica apertures, was that of roasting; but in twenty minutes nearly all the flesh was consumed, and tbe bones began to crumble, A half hour later very little could be seen of the form of the body. At a quarter to eight Dr. Hamilton opened the door of the furnace, and but one or two pieces of bone could be seen, and they crumbled under the weight of the ashes. The fumes from ths furnace were unpleasantly perceptiblo at a distance from the locality. The cremation was completed in the shortest time on record two hours and thirtyfive minutes. The weight of the ashes, which contained a lew calcined fragments oi Done, was lour pounds and eleven and a half ounces. In connection with ine recent, crema tion of Dr. Winslow's remains at Bale Lake, it may be interesting to know that the society for the introduction of cremation into Germany has paid the sum of fifteen thousand marks to the town of Gotba, to cover the necessary expenses of erecting a cremation apparatus. Strict regulations bave also been pumisnea oy ine poiu-e, uruurmg mc cwiumiuu "j competent medical officers of all the bodies submitted to be burned, so as to pre vent cremation in all cases where the causes of death have not been properly ascertained. In order to etui timber guard against abuse, bodies sent to Gotha from abroad are to be subjected to the same, or even more stringent rules, before being received for the operation. No corpse is to be Durneo unless tne neoeaseu bas expressed a wisn to mat ueu, uu tbe relatives have approveo. n axrantlonallv hanpv one. and Mrs, Placide is stricken with sorrow at her husband's death. California's large foreign trade in fruit and wines Is no mystery, when it is known that she bas 3,800,000 fruit trees and 86.000.000 grapevines, and harvests from 300,000,000 to 500,000,000 pounds of fruit yearly to "come over and help us?" Rates of living, on the average, are about tue same as at ine taai, Some things cost more, others less, In the matter of fuel, though wood is sixteen dollars a cord, the necessities of the climate require so little that tbe bills would be lees than onetounn the cost when wood is four dollars per oord at home. It is only needed for cooking, 4 tbv nbvudajice of Itch., nutritious Tbe I.augu or Women. A woman has no natural gift more bewitching than a sweet laugh. It is like the sound of flutes on the water. It baps from her in a clear, sparkling rill, and the heart that hears it feels as if bathed in a cool, exhilerating spring. Have you ever pursued a fugitive through the streets, lead on by a lair iaugn, now iiere, now there, now loBt, now found 1 We have, and we are pursuing that wandering voice to this day. Sometimes it comes to us in the middle of care and sorrow, or irksome business, and then we turn away the evil spirit of mind. How much we owe to that sweet laugh I It turns prOBe to poetry; it brings sunshine to flowers, over the darkness of the wood in which we are traveling; it touches with light even our sleep, which is no more than the image of death.but is consumed with beams tbat n th ihadgwj of bsaottoUtv,

Irnrrtml VOL. XXXVIII. COLUMBUS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1877. NO. 189. SIEBERT k ULLEYi BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURERS. l'rlnters.Blnders, Stationers and Legal.BIank Publisher. BOOK BINDING Of every Description, by the Edition of Optira Hsuse ap4 Building '(Up Stain), COLUMBUS. GEO. T.nUVAZL, MERCHANT TAILOR 157 SOUTH HIGH ST., aug!7 ly lp MQODIE, HUBBARD& CO. .BANKERS, 61 SOUTH HIGH STREET. jy9 t In BY TELEGRAPH TO THE OHIO STATS JOURNAL FOREIGN. lattJmtntaL Uflicei High, Pearl aul Chapel 8t. J M. COMIT. w. rKAHOiioo. COMLY & FRANCISCO, PUBLISHERS AND PSOPBUTOBfl. JAMES HI. COHXY. .... Editor. OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY Indications for Tennessee and Ohio Val ley and the Lake Region Stationary or rising barometer; westerly winds; slight changes in temperature, and partly cloudy ueather. Gold closed in New York yesterday at 106f. ' The Maine Republican Covention will lie held at Augusta to-morrow. At a meeting of the Republican State Executive committee yesterday the preliminary work of the campaign received attention. Judge West, Senator Matthews and other prominent Republicans, be sides the members of the committee, were in the city. The opportunity to meet the candidate for Qovernor was freely embraced by citizens. The meeting was highly encouraging. Its work may be stated briefly. The campaign will be opened by the Republicans at Athens on the 25th inst., with Judge "West, General Garfield and Senator Matthews as speakers. A Beries of meetings to be held thereafter will be announced in due time. It is understood that previous to the formal opening of the campaign Judge West will addreBS his neighbors at Beliefon taine. Judge West and the Colored Voter The Cincinnati Times publishes the following letter : Columbus, August 2. Judge Wm. H. West, BellefonUloe, O : DEAR Sib: Permit me to congratu late vou on the distinguished honor ol having received the nomination of the Republican party for Governor of Ohio, and the party itsell on ine wisaom ais' nlovpil bv delegates in making that nonv ination. With itB brilliant record, and led on by one who was conspicuous in making that record, there is every reason why all who ever voted the Republican ticket, or desired tne perpetuation 01 m li;' . !i u...,M ; . puuuuau prinipeo, buuuw vigorous support in the coming election. I need not asaure you, dear sir, that your effective service in the furtherance of all the great measures of human freedom championed by the Republican party, is held in grateful remembrance, and that you may rely upon the fifteen thousand colored voters of Ohio as solid for yourself this fall. Respectfully, Jab. Poindextib. Review of tne Brltl.li Grata Trade. London, August 7. The Mark Lane Express, in the usual weekly review of the British corn trade, says : ' Wheat may now be considered to have reached maturity, and in some southern districts harvesting has commenced. The crops of wheat, barley and oats in tbe fens art heavy, but badly laid by rain, and almost everywhere the fields have a more or less dingy appearance which be tokens blight; but the harvest is now so near that nothing short of a disastrous changa of weather, whioh is very unlike ly, can influence to any extent tne yield of English wheat, which most probably will be short of the average crop, although not so disappointing as last year's. After a lengthened period of healthy activity our market for wheat the past week has shown signs of depression consequent upon finer weather and tbe temporary quietude which pervades the political situation, so far as this country is concerned. With a prospect of speedy increase in supplies, English millers have bought foreign wheat very sparingly. Imports into London continue liberal, the quantity reported up to Friday being 57,000 quarters. An increased export movement has been going on from Ainer ica, and unless reports of the new wheat crop are exaggerated, both India and Russia will find her a formidable rival for the supply of this country's requirement. Supplies which are pushed forward in autumn are likely to be heavy this year, aurmnlallv as our ranee of prices is not sufficiently low to exercise any restrain,! ing influence, ana there is not muco chance of ths continent relieving us, as according to all accounts France will have sufficient for her own wants and buLlit-tl tn snare for ours, while the wheat crops of Germany and Russia promise abundantly. The tone of onr local, trade has been depressed, and prices have receded one shilling on both English and foreign wheat. xne reeling w porn, " nd, has shown great steadiness, and barley B.d maize nave sold 6d. higher, the scarcity pf the forrser Tiay. ing strengthened prices The pate trade is also steady, in the hoe r and no rednotion has k.on fminri nsTHuarv to effect sales. The floating cargo trade for wheat is very stagnant, and although holders have ex-hihitsri nnnaiderable tenacity bids made have indicated a decline of one shilling in . ahillinm nn the week. Maize, al though steady, has barely maintained the lata Bilvtnrj). Sales of English wheat noted last week ur 91134 Quarters at 64s. 6d.. against 1829 quarters at 47s. 6d. the previous year. Imports into the Kingdom for tne week ending July zs, zio.iwa cwt. wueai 95,345 owt. flour. The Porte Recounts tbe Horrible Haasasres. London, Aug. 7. The Porte has iasned a circular recounting the horrible massacres perpetrated by the Cossacks inrf Bulgarians, xnese inciuae me uunr ing alive of seventy Mussulmans of the village ot Ayultiemi, ana me coia dioou ed massacre of forty others as well ss wo men and children. ihe circular declares that the English military attache has as. certained the truth of the allegations. Turks Threatening; a Town In The. saly. Athens, Aug. 7. Many villages in the district of Volo have refused to pay taxeB. The Turks have placed six guns before tbe gates of - V olo, and threaten to Dom hard the town on the first sign of insur rection. Great uneasiness prevails in Thessaly and Epirius. Bnsslan Defeat Near Ardanan Constantinople. Aug. 7. Mukhtar date of August as follows: One thousand Karapack horsemen defeated two Russian banal' ions, with three guns, at Demiricapon near Ardanan. Emperor William. Salzburg, Aug. 7. The Emperor Willinm hax arrived here. He eoes to Iachl to-morrow to meet the Emperor of Austria. General Grant, Bellaqee. Italy. August 7. Ex (. Grant and Dartv arrived day. A grand fete has been given In their honor. Congratulatory Address. Rome. Aue. 7. American residents have sent a congratulatory address to ex President Grant. Tribute to the Forte. Belgrade. Aub. 7. The Skuptschina, before prorogation, decided to continue payment of tribute to the Porte. insured for $4500 in the Amazon and two other companies. JJayton, Aug. 7. About midnigniiaei evening tbe barn of John W. 'iurner, four miles from the city, took fire by some unknown means and was bnrned to the ground. The building had just been completed at an expense of three thousand dollars. It was filled with crops amounting to several thousand dollars, all of whioh. was destroyed, ine totai loss will not be less than five thousand dol- ars, on which there was no insurance. Chicaoo, Aug. 7. The Inter-Ocean's Green Bay special says the reports of ravages of the fire at Eaton, Missouri, have been overdrawn. Over thirty families have been burned out, and in many instances entire crops destroyed. The loss is estimated at $13,000. No lives lost. WASHINGTON. the EX SECRETARY ROBESON. WiatmsnTnv. Ancr. 7. Hon. George Robeson instituted a replevin suit in Supreme Court of the lnstrlcl ol Columbia yesterday, to retake from a county constable ten rolls of newspaper, such as is used upon a Bullock press, which it is understood had been seized on an execution as property of the proprietors of the National Republican paper. is valued at two hundred dollars. Ihis the first occasion on which Robeson has taken any public step showing his connection with the publication of the National Republican newspaper, although that connection has been imputed to him for some time. EXPORTS AND IMPORTS. Returns from all customs districts of all exports and imports during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1877, show total exports specie values of $602,474,681; total imports 041,3UY,04h; excess oi exports over imports $151,107,032. In the seal year 18V 0, tne excess oi exports over imports was but $79,643,481. In tbe fiscal year 1877 exports of coin and bullion amonnted to $56,183,237, and the Imports to $40,774,414, whil in the preceding year the exports amounted to $56,606,302, and imports to only $16,- 30,oai. TEMPERANCE. At a meeting of the Mrs. R. B. Hayes Temperance Society last night a resolu tion waa adopted expressing priae ana Base Ball, Special to the Ohio Sts'.e Jouru-! Wheeling, W. Va., Aug. 7. The Bunkeves auain defeated the Standards here to day by hard bitting and good base running, Kellj, their new catcher, leading at the bat. The nlaving of Burke, Hulli van and Xellv was especially fine. The Buckeyes play at Allegheny to-morrow. Below 1b the score : CRIME AND CASUALTY. Two Furious and Fatal Fights la Kentucky. Louisville, Aug. 7. A special dispatch to the Courier-Journal, dated Bar-rodsburg, Kentucky, says: News has reached here to-day of two serious shooting affrays that occurred yesterday in the edge of Washington county, and near the Mercer line. Maxville was the scene of one difficulty, in which John Sutterfield shot and killed John Butler, a man of family. The fatal termination of this affair waa tbs result of a previous difficulty over a sack of flour, Sutterfield being a miller. Gardner's store, near Millersburg, was where the other fight occurred, in wbich several, families took part, and which was the renewal of a former fracas. Several of the Royalty, Gardners, Cases and Sheridans were participants in the affray. Ooe man, . Sheridan, was shot through the head and killed outright. Gardner was shot in the arm, and one Case in tbe wrist. Twenty or thirty shots were fired, and probably others were wounded, whose names I could not learn. L. S. Brown, who was shot yesterday in this county, was wounded in five different places, every fire from the revolver taking effect in his body. The boy Smith, who did the shooting, is still at large. Fatal Jtesult of a Quarrel Ingan Francisco. San Feancibco, August 7. John E. Daily, a stock broker, was shot and killed to-day by Leslie C. Hanks, ConBul General for Guatemala, in this city. The trouble grew out of a trifling disagreement last Saturday between Hanks and Emil Kuranda, Daily's partner. Daily took up the quarrel yesterday and worsted Hanks in a personal faulteir in the sum of $3555. He has no bondsmen and no property. The Police Commissioners of Chicago favor almost unanimously an increase of the city's police force by the addition of 200 men, 100 to be mounted. Edward Cook has been appointed re. ceiver for the Protective Life Insurance company at Chicago, and tbe company has been enjoined ironi transacting fur ther business. ' Graver's escape was evidently a pretty narrow one. A correspondent or tbe via clnnati Gazette who attended the entire investigation, comes to the conclusion that there .was money used in Graver's election, but it was not found that he had a band in using it. He says the popular feeling in Oregon is that the case has a bad look. That is about the state of popular feeling on the subject everywhere. The Syracuse Courier of Thursday morning says : "Frank Walworth, the parricide, who received a pardon from Governor Ribinson yesterday, arrived in this city from Auburn thla morning at one o'clock, in company with his mother, who has devoted herself since his incarceration to freeing her unfortunate son from a terrible fate, wbich befell him on her account. Together they eat in the waiting-room at the Central depot, until the arrival of the St. Louis express, which they boarded and departed for Albany at two o'clock. Happily, very few persons knew of their presence, hence they were spared the pain and mortification of being made a publio show of. Walworth came out of prison last evening and was received into a carriage at the gates by his mother. They drove across to the depot, and, without alighting waited for the train, which brought them to in a personal en. e-"" r -; ;, counter. Bystanders state that Hanks Bu iuiuw approached Daily from behind and w convince one that his pardon is an act shot him without warning. Hanks of the V humanity, if not also of the claims that Daily approached him mBt ct J"8.'1"6- His hair has grown threateningly with a heavy cane, and he IoDB ,Blnoe., hl .P'?1".0',. confinement, fired in self-defense. Hanks is in confine- 8na . ows " to lau in neavy iocks ,, ..I,;.. ...n,!..,;.. n.;i ... upon his BhoulderB. lie was dressed formerly a broker of New York. He has a family at New Haven. Hanks was formerly a member of the shipping firm of J. C. Merrill & Co. Both occupied a high social position, and were in easy circumstances.Desperadoes Interfering with Unit ed States Officers. Memphis, Tenn., Aug. 7. On laBt . " . " ..... . - I iun.ro satisfaction that tbe lady whose name me t,.;. Ti0r,i TTn;t to.no - . , r . . , i: iiuaj bask ail) .sclus. j w uanvu wtHns uu - society bears is lp no way responsible for and 7eebhi were Bent by furnishing a basket of flowerB to the Qeneral person, Collector for this dis- Schutzenfest, and therefore sees no good tpjot, to seize tbe tobaceo faotory of John reason for a change of its adopted alma A Bnrtoni in Henry oounty, Tennessee, mater. flom twenty miles north of Paris. They THE INDIANS. had two men and the driver of the wagon Immediately after the session of the with them, and seized the factory and be- Cabinet to-day President Hayes issued a gan loading the machinery on the wagon, general order prohibiting the sale of arms wnen suuaeniy iuey were nurrouuueu u n, ammunition to the Indians, and re- twentyfive armed men and ordered to un- all llran.i tn ti.iilo mit.h them in load the wagon some oi ine aeBperauoes Turkish iron c ads attacked seven xtus. such artioles. Military commandants are insisting on killing tbe oiticers, who were lian gunboats and destroyed two of them. charged with the duty of assisting in the forced to aDanaon me wora ana leave. A Yienna correspondent confirms the exeoution of the order. Verdict of Acquittal In the Fl he report that Austria has concluded the THE 8AMOAN APPLICATION. Jones Harder Case. financial arrangements necessary for a Fin,, n.u-.t f j..mn.M.( hnf in.it Chicago, Aug. 7. In the trial of Piof. partial mobilization. The total amount VdWiripn W "J xuuoiuvAWH, . I TV1 U .i1aa nf Q fl Tnnao -F thfl I i J ' - no Anf AAft a ' .- no action, awaiting fuller information, of ""V' 'If X T',-"? oorroweu isoo.vuo uonus, . i i hs imn rni nnnnniRHi .iiiurnni in ititifuii i mi ion of the Bamoan uovern- ""-e;- ..:.' iTt. 7f... AwA . i here is si plainly and spoke but little to his mother, who remained: with him and attended to his little wants with untiring devotion." Foreign. A Bucharest correspondent reports much Bickness in the Russian army on the Dobrudscha. The amount of bullion withdrawn from the Bank of England on balance yesterday was 40,000. The first installment of reinforcements for Cuba, one thousand men, will leave Spain on tbe 15th of August. A dispatch from Yienna says the formation of the Russian landwher has been found to be deficient, owing to a great want of organization. A dispatch from Constantinople says in a naval engagement on Sulind river the Life on the Sandwich Islands. Iy a squad of ill-disposed persons attempt ed to "Bulldoze" guards by firing pistols and other intimidating proceedings, ine guards, however, stood their ground like brave men, and dehed these "Bulldozers." Just as we commenced to get quieted down and allay the bad blood which has come to the surface for the past few days, there appears on the stage of excitement another agitator in the person of one of our most distinguished ministers. Last Sunday evening his discourse related to the strikers and workingmen generally, which was considered to be extremely inflammatory and entirely out of place at tbe Dresent time. He handled the rail road magnates in a free handed manner and bespoke for them the most unenviable place in tba world to come. : The all absorbing topic of tbe day is the Herein trial, and a curious anxiety to know how it will terminate. The plea of Insanity is going to be strongly urged by bis counsel. Ine examination of witnesses will take several days and the end is patiently waited for. The universaiist camp meeting, wnicn is being held near Mt. Liberty, is largely attended, and young folks are having huge times. Concerts at Delaware. Delaware, August 6, To the Editor of the Ohio Stats Journal : The closing concerts of Delaware Nor mal Music School will occur Thursday and Friday evenings of this week, The first will be a miscellaneous concert, at which tbe leading soloiBts will take part. At the second Haydn's sublime Oratorio, Creation, will be given, with a chorus of Beventy. Future Beat of Catholicism. The imnression prevails very exten sively that Palestine is to be re-peopled with .Israelites who are now scattered abroad in all lands and that a large emigration of this people thitherward has set in. Home authorities declare even that the population of Palestine to-day is double what it was ten years ago. If this refers to the Jews the Rev, Dr. De Hass, who has been United States Consul at Jerusalem for seven or eight years, writes to the Christian Advocate to say that it may be true, but of the entire population it is not true. The country, di;Trth7aKodie:d men to tap f fift. b" f English i, Tn.n.k .,,. -.n:ni, seamen who Bhould be so unfortunate as to HONOLULU. Interesting Letter from m "Press" Correspondent Progress ot Civilization No Cannibals or Heathens Mow; Influence or commercial Intercourse Intelligent Hands Wanted 1 he C limate, Expenses of Living, Ele. Correspondence ol the Philadelphia Press. Honolulu, July 18. Thirteen weeks have passed since the craft which bore us from San Francisco was moored in the harbor of Honolulu,, and yet I have not been able to find the moment when I could send you a brief mention of "What I know about the Sandwich Islands." It is astonishing to realize how little we know of a foreign land before we have a residence there 1 And I verily believe there is no BPot on earth of wbich so lit 'e true knowledge exists in other lands this little dot of land in the midst of the surging billows of the Pacific ocean. Many of tbe foreign residents here are English or American, and hold frequent correspondence with friends in the old homes. Vessels' arrive at this port every day. A British mail steamer plying between Australia and San Fran cisco stops here on the trip each way, making two steamers per month at our wharf. Jn tbe harbor there is always a man-of-war of some foreign nation, and generally more than one. Every nation, kindred, and tribe on earth seems to be represented in the motley crowd that stands upon tbe wharf when the steamer touches here, and yet we can scarcely scan the "special correspondence" of an fing lish or American paper that does not con tain some outlandish ideas concerning tbe people of the Sandwich Islands. A recent writer in the Saturday Review speaks of the people of Honolulu as "lounging Kanakas, half-civilized by Massachusetts missions." Surely, thoee who have seen the Dowager Queen Emma, or His Majesty, the reigning King Kalakaua, would never regard them as members of a half-civilized race. Still later, some one gave an account of the rage of the Sandwich Islanders toward a ship's crew who had com mitted some outrage, and anticipated the fruit makes it but a slight expense. The water is so soft that the foulest washings can be completed at the brookside without tub or boiler. Ironing is done by. heaters that carry their own fire of cbarooal. During three months of housekeeping here my outlay for fuel aud lights has been less than four dollars 1 As I have a carpenter and a school teacher to feed it can readily be understood that we did not live on raw apples and Graham "gems." I would like to tell yoa how these peo ple seem to me, with all their native kindness and courtesy; what wonders of scenery there are; what luxuriance of vegetation; what curiosities of social life, but I forbear till some other time.; Suffice it, there is everything to make up a strangely curious study for the philanthropist, or even the ordinary student of human nature. M. M. R. LAND OF THE MIDNIGHT SUN. Within the Arctle Clrele Peculiarities or the Xorweglan Coast and of the People. . , the applicatii a some want of provisions among m.nt to the President of the United '""i""" 4. J . r. " jr troops between Bistova ana iirnova on " . . ...I nnHH.n. f DM 11TI. nn 1 11 H DTnilllll 111 - . . . . . treat Britain lor u,y; "V "" T ';Z w crount oi tne difficulty in up tbe Turkish army, is rapidly being depopulated and lmpoverien- ed. Deserted villages are every where to be Been. There is less wealth among the people, fewer camels, horses and stock of all kinds than ten years ago. Fruit and forest trees are also disappearing. Carmel was almost stripped of her timber for the Suez canal, and as any fruit tree is taxed, whether it bears or not, few are now planted. Everything there appears to be finished. There is no progress, no improvement of any kind. There are about thirty thousand jews in an Palestine. They are mOBtly from Russia, and do not go there to work or develop the oountrv. but to die. that they may sleeD with their fathers in holy ground. They are generally aged and poor, living on the charity of their people in Europe . . , .1 . n r f 1 . TJI.t- VBrUtUb Ul H.l.Mll.Hl WW inn I . .U- .1 : II. 1 1 n I- nmniiMnn Btaies ana me Hueea m urea . . p d .howinw that . "V"""".. " T'XI nroteet on and assistance to enable tnem . 7V i il . r 7u wagons to transport supplies Deyonu we rmaintain"heir peace and independence. ae'a hff?fe, WJ? ft. & depots along the Roumanian side of the .r j . T. r" iTi.v river. setts, buuu. iiib.upmov'"vu a j:..k e tj.i: .... h. -Rm. III- TlnH Ultra woo KAnionilcul rrt -.oil uisiiiv,u uuui Mgiiiu sksth w to await transportation to an fctaSKwS ' " . . . I nnnforennA van verw imimrtant. The A Mavage SoniH , u nr., Be. Wilh.lm ,.! t;.t.mmlnlltv Nw Yohk. Aue. 7. Mrs. Frank ' f 'u trimn n,a. ftllw anaanltmi bv Henrv The Roval Victoria victualling yard Clark, a rejected lover, at her residence in at Deptford is still busy replenishing Tarinfllntl ft VAT) IIP last aTeninsr. Clark stores which have lately been drawn upon Soldiers Acquitted or Blame. . , . WRt.nm i0- her for weekBi anu jn order to provision the garrisons at Reading. Pa.. Aug. 7. The Coro- waa .ntarinnr thn hniiHA last evening Gibraltar and Malta, in each of which ner's inrv in the case of the recent riots k. tt.t.j nor iih . hatchet, cutting there is now accumulated food sufficient rendered a verdict io-oay acquitting me aye terrible gaBhes in her head, soldiers composing the ourin regiment Mygterloq, murder of a Physician. rom any oiauie lur ur.ug uu '" T HAUTE. InD Aug. 7 Dr. J, TaKing into consideration ne .ear.u. pen. ArmBtrn 'leading pbvsician. was in which they were placed, ii any . . n,Th .h,h of . , , - .1 . .In.n m.UL (.111. Ii.i.n. . -. . OUBTAILTNG MR I.O. The Cabinet to-day authorized an or- dr prohibiting the sale of arms to In dians, and the order was soon afterward issued. POSTMASTER APPOINTED. Pa's ! P. Perlev has been appointed PoBtmaster at Henry, MarBhall county, Illinois. for the maintenance of a large army for twelve months. ZANESVILLE. I AlUIUHi. I -j and America. It will require a different """""j clasB of emigrants altogether, says the Doctor, to recover this cursed land, it ib true there are new houBes going up outside the citv walls, but mostly small tene. mente. built bv committees for the benefit of their poor members. Work has haB been done on those dwellings by night to avoid the hot sun during the day, and not because there is sucn a demand for houses as has been reported. The latent crogramme for Palestine is not Jewish, but Papal occupancy. The Jesuits of Europe, adds Dr. De Hass, are dissatisfied with the condition of things in touch these shores I The writer, a corre spondent of the London Times, dilates upon the catastrophe that would follow the recognition of an English crew by these excited "cannibal islanders." What expressions to be sent forth of a land whose noble, lovely daughters are the wives of men equally worthy of their own native English, Scotch, or American soil I These things are amusing, very; but especially so when read in the magnificent reading and library rooms of tbe Hawaiian Upvernment, among a collec tion of the choicest literature of the whole world, which has been gathered for the enjoyment of a people known outside of their island Eden as "cannibals" and "heathen I" These people . have been strangely misrepre. the resources of their country concealed, the prosperity of their Jung. dom denied. .Bigotry at home has gen erously supplied Borrosboola-Gba flannel to these "heathens." and it has been lavishly distributed by parties sporting the uniform of apostolic teachers, but they have exacted large returns to their own private coffers for their share in the distribution, and they have strenuously labored to keep the fountains of wealth plugged up to all but their own selfish clique. Honest travelers, who would have told the truth, have been seized as soon as tbey touched the sou, and, imagining - me . uTi.a k n T Br ' S this place at 9 o'clock to-night, ,t mus be borne, b,'GeneralIBoito. who P. from tQ a bility for the terrible tragedy is directly e"l He wsb J .1 .k . T?,li The, roannnoi. reluming iruui o Yin., .u - uint. u. . ...iS. , At th . hour the causa ol tbe ...,ik.H n kn. whn nnmnnseil the 'UM " -J""' Departure of tbe Knights for LancasterThe Home ol Ureal Hen-Local miscellany. lawless body who were instigating the riotous proceedings, and the moo is primiarily responsible for all subsequent trouble and oiooosneo. Mexican Filibusters Arrested. Galveston, Aug. 7. The News's San Antonio special says : Lieutenant Bullis crossed the Rio Grande on the 4tb, re captured five stolen horseB, and returned . n. - . , r . i. ir.:.. the Texas siae. un tne uin juojoi Zanesville, Aug. 7, To the Editor of the Ohio Stats Journal : The Knights have shipped their horses and departed for Lancaster, in order to have a preparatory tilt this afternoon, Tbe Knights are composed of the best i in- j ,, i ..j .1.. Italy, and there is a movement on foot to nTs" ' make Jerusalem tbe head oi me iiaun :r-. .. . , n.:..:. - k k .n. by their "generous entertainers," and cuuruu. vuuiuim.uuc.a -r" i" .:,. Ill..u . .k km .,.. nninioHtnn.untin.ia for tha territory: """" . , - j .tt!i-0j fMm tnai nave ueen reau oy mous&uus wuoae engiu.. nao i.,,u - "r hparta ache a. thought riRa of thoaa who ""lm.kiJLmTy.gZ;. have given up all the attractions of m f: p 'S . aMnTnTzion hme civilization to spread light V'T". .T.r""T", rif..V. among the "Is ands of the Sea." But V. JB"ir.? . .k! I""":" n new e?a has dawned. Commercial inter oe irauBierreu, xubfb uu I,...;... . ...uiiinni. .1 T If 1 . 1 . . . . 1 1 . .1 1 11.. 1 1 1 I WUinO UD KHEU l UU. 1U1.U1... .V - nus ia is to ue inataueu, uuu mo , -, . , , ol the Great King" is to be the future U8 i " ?ou,u . f .T. 115 r tha Pontifical He. Russia, how- hypocrisy are ro ling bapk before the sun I r" k. .nm.thinc, to aav on the o true Md intelligent influences, future disposition of Palestine. The Chatauaua Assemblv n r . n mi n i I to rATRPOINT, n. I., AUg. aub nrai --,-, , . . ,, f(n. Vln filli.l . ' exercise to-day was an admirable address """""'rr v.w7, Mm,i Jom gentlemen ol Sinesvuie, and en. on Manners, delivered by jxiisb Mras T . ,t . .... (a.ned couraged as they are by tbe courteous Huntington Miller, ot Vn.lcsK: , l, 11 f, ki .Mt. but he escaDed. Escobedo efforts and genial attention of the promi- o'clock John B.Uough delivered ms iec- Loredo, without funds, nent people of Lancaster, they feel they ture on Eloquence and Orators to a large " P J ; m -w the nobleat exhibition of valor- A Good for Something Missionary The following little story, from the New York Evangelist, will interest a large number of our citizens: come people think that a missionary is good for nothing but to preach to the heathen, and maims -preacuiug IB ';" n nm it nn Hrnlinnnf thdir goodish" talk which a lay brother or audience. At 2 o'clock Rev. W. W, Ramsey, of Kentucky, presided over the Second Church conference in the pavilion, and brief addresses were delivered SSLS tbe accounted for in part by the fact hohl Assembly will open to-night. Twins to Governor Pilchard. ous dexterity ever witnessed in this sec New Orleans, Aug. 7. Ex-Governor tion, and assisted by the gifted oratory of Packard, in an interview to-day said Honorables ihomas awing and unariee thai his sudden return to this city Martin, the spectacle will be grand to be .:nk Via aii.nntoH fnr in nart. hv the fact I hold. that Mrs. Packard to-day presented him The Ministerial Association of the with twins, boys, weighing eleven pounas ,jnesviieiioiriui, m. vuu.ui,o . .u each. BY MAIL AND TELEGRAPH. STAtiDABDS. R. A.I'O.E.Bh. Workingmen Who Didn't Strike. A correspondent of the Christian Union tells of a better way than striking : "A gardener has worked on our place ever since 1866, eleven years. During that time his wages have never been over $2 a day, and that only in high times; it ranged from $1.65 down; the.most of the time it wan 1.25. His wife had no income. and did no work except to take care of the children and the house, and he had no income but his wages. But during that time he kept his wife and children com fortably, fed them well, so that they were always healthy, and dressed them so that thev went to day and Sunday school, al ways neatly dressed: kept a cow; and saved out of his earnings enough to buy two lota, and build a house and a stable. He saved the S1800 with which he did this in the first eight years. I do not know that he has Baved anything dur- jg the last three years. But be never dra.B or used tobacco. He was a Protestant Irishman, During the same time we had a co.tphman who had from $2 to $2 50 a day; drank and smoked; owed everybody; never saved a cent; and, finally, when he left, had to borrow money to get out of town." George Ellington in the Brooklyn Eagle tells what a single man did one dav in New York with one dollar. He got a shave, breakfast, a paper collar, a pack of cigarettes, attended a concert, had lunch, beer, dinner for two, consisting of soup, fish, macaroni with cheese, beefsteak, apples and peanuts, treated himself and friend to a glass of beer, got lodgings for the night, and a cup of coffee in the morning. - The suit of the Government against William Mc&ee it set for th third Mod day In September, Lane 0 1 a Muflet. 0 J Veuum 0 1 II Ulasscook 0 Hagan 1 i Barkley 0 2 J HOOIDSOQ . " I.nkena 1 0 2 Wilkinson l 9 16 Totals . ,.,4 19 27 4 4 Following the Hostile Indians, Helena, Montana, Aug. 7. Advices from Missoula to the morning of the 6th Bay Gibbon, with one hundred regulars, infantry, in wagons, left Missoula post to follow the hostiles. at one o'clock Satur day afternoon. Hedesigned making thirty-five miles a dav. The hostileB were at TViotlttla Ranch on Friday night, seven tvfive miles from Missoula, and within J .. ... ,1 TT 1 ten miles oi tne trail to xvoss cluih. Receiver Appointed. St. Lotus. August 7. Judge Gotts- ohalk. of the Circuit Court, this after- throughout Central New York noon appointed L, E. Alexander, former- je American Dental Association 1b in ly CaBhier of the Mercantile iana, re- 8e8,ion at Chicago, with a large attend' ceiver oi me voiumuia uuw iuomauw enmrmnv. in this citv. that institution having been declared insolvent. There were heavy rains in California on Friday. ATroy (N. Y.) firm ships horse cars to Bombay. Tbe Canadians are confidently erpect- imr a. bountiful harvest. Australians talk of planting oyster beds and Tommy Hendricks, have to wander on a very extensive scale. from the old home and make known their Wheat is yielding unexpectedly well M " " r ...,.h-i i m. t,mi i nav l r it i .-- . . . , minds, whether the learned M.l. Houtuard session atfthe South Street Church, with a good attendance from neighboring cities. The coal miners of (bia vicinity will organize a Union to-night. Good wages have been agreed upon, but tbe diggers feel they must talk the labor question over tnaether. Some one has discovered that J udge Johnson is an old Muskicsumite. Mus-bmffnm soil is Droduotive of wise and great souls; but they all, like Sammy Cox . m II 1 ' 1 . I -. .I,.- BUOKEYIB. ft. A.PO.E.bh. Burke 0 8 12 0 Pabor 1 0 0 0 0 Callahan 0 0 0 0 0 Sullivan I 0 16 0 2 Kelley ' ? Htrlel. 1 1 1 I I Spence .0 i 2 0 0 McUormiok 0 a 1 a 0 Welch 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 20 27 T 7 Runs earned Buckeyes 8; Standardi 1. Fire Becord. New York, Aug. 7. The Brooklyn oil works at Green Point were partially destroyed bv fire last night. Losa $100,- 000: fully insured. These works were known as the Stokes oil works, and there has been much litigation over them re- iwntlv. Green Bat, Wis., Aug. 7. A special sayB : The farm village of Eaton, Brown county. Wisconsin, about fifteen miles east of this city, was totally destroyed by fire. The forest has been burning for five weeks, the fire extending many miles In n direction, destroying many mill ion feet of timber and thousands of dol lars in other property. Home twentyhve families were burned out in Eaton, los: vervthlng thev possessed. A large num ber of animals were roasted alive, une family is stated to have perished in the lames and four other entire families are missing. Great suflerlng exists among tbe homeless people. Cincinnati, Aug. 7. Longley & Co.'i printing establishment, as Foster's, Ohio, was burned last sight, Loss $16,000; Trotting at Bochester. Rochester, Aug. 7. The race for the ance. Ex-Governor Letcher has been nom- . .. r. rw l inated tor tbe Virginia aouae oi.ueie-gates. Charles G. Martin, a broker. No. 2d4 won't soon have to take up his bag and hunt a broader field, The farmers are entering complaints against the dry spell, which promises them a little trouble. I 7 -.r .' , . .. , -ti; 2:34 class was won by Hannis, in three faflwey, flew i ora, nas laueo; uaDiu-straight heats. B;st time, 2:24J. White ties $80,000. n . . .... , i - . I ... I t ! 1 1. Tr;.... ..;(. Stockings won in the ciass, suiver- iihuobibkiwhiw." uu.yc.o.v eideB taklug the first and Lady Snell the of Mississippi next year. The State sup- fourth heat. Time, ZM, mit, sues tne iunas, 2:24, 2::24. The Wisconsin Republican State Con- ! vention is to be held in Madison on X ues- Dental Association. dav. September 11. Chioaqo. Aug. 7. The Dental Asso- u . i n.r.p atnl. C9D from ciation reassembled this afternoon t a Harvard boy's coat while it was hang- mree o ciocs;. va mouuu, n the college boat-houBe, on Charles of Iowa, read a lengthy paper; Bubjeot : nn Fridayi "Is tbe dental pulp essential to the integ rity of the dental structure?" lhe pa per waa accepted and discussed. The first bale of the new crop of cotton was received at Savannah yesterday from Florida and sold at auction for twelve cents per pound. Brazil is buying railroad Iron, locomotives and horse car materials of us, and The Bergen Trial at Mt. Vernon Special to the Ohio State Journal. Mt. Vernon, O., Aug. 7. Court in the Bergen case convened again this morning at nine o'clock. The usual large orowd of spectators was present. The State re sumed the examination of witnesses, seV' eral of whom testified to Bergen's having exnressed an enmity toward McBride prior to the commission of the deed. At noon the State rested their examination in chief. In the afternoon the defense examined several witnesses, among this number several physicians, who gave their opinions on the insanity question. Numerous affidavits were also introduced showing insanity in the family. William Bergen, the father of the defendant, was examined at some length, giving a nisio The Rochester Union makes the following extracts from a private letter dated at Tromsoe, Norway, July 3 : "We steamed, into this pretty Arctic town night before last, and shall make our home here a week longer, while a portion of the party finish their northern trip around North Cape to Vadsce. We crossed the mountains by means of horses and carriages, using 120 for our ride of 200 miles. The law requires every stationfrom six to ten miles apart to furnish travelers fresh horses within half an hour of their arrival. We are now two days into the Arctio Circle, and where we now live the sun shines brightly at midnight from May 20 to July 22. Even two days before reaching this point the sun was so strong at midnight that the ladies , wanted shades. This coast is perfectly beautiful, or, I should have said, grand, as well as wonderful. For nearly two thousand miles the islands are bo thick so close together that it is like sailing up a river which expands into lakes. The whole distance is overshadowed with snow-capped mountains from 8000 to 6000 feet in height, rising abruptly from tbe water, while in the distance are to be seen those which are much higher. We were exposed only once or twice to tbe open sea, and then only two or three hours at a time. The air here is very exhilarating. Yesterday the children picked wild uowers as we were walking. and within a few feet made snow balls. It is a wonder that in so short a season anything cau be grown in tbis latitude, and yet grass Borings up rapidly, often grow- " ing an in.'h in twentyfour hours. They have but two seasons really ten months ef winter and two of summer. Although the season 1 so lo jg yet tbe feords never freeze, and I think we often have as cold weather in New York. The occupation of the place is fishing, mostly herring and codhsh. All are well to do; no rich and no poor. Abe people are intelligent, the masses receiving a fair education. sut what a queer place and what queer customs 1 From the belfrey of the church between the hours of 8 at night and 6 a. m. a man shouts the time of night through a large tin horn at intervals of every half hour. The clergymen wear large, wide rufls. We have just been to see the Laps, some three or four miles from the town. They were notified the day before , and for a small sum spent the whole day among the mountains gathering their reindeer which they drove down for us to see some four hundred of them in number. It was such a novel sight to see them com- ' ing down the steep mountains. They will not live low down, as they eat only rein deer moss, which grows where it is very cold. Cows will not eat where tbey have been, as tbe scent of the little hair tbey shed is very offensive to them. We go from here to the feords around Molde and Bergen and purpose spending a few weeks . there; from thence we go to Hamburg, through Germany to Geneva, reaching. Nice about the 1st of November. The trip so far has been one of great pleasure. The vast wealth bo long looked up in the rocky-ribbed soil of these islands will now soon be freely circulating through tbe tides of cosmopolitan wealth, -ine recent reciprocity treaty with tbe American Union haB given new vigor to all kinds of business, and everything is looking up," from the humble vendor of poi to the ohief omcera of tbe Jung. , .7. .. . nooie rans to De employed in aany avoca- mthnr weaa guts wouiu mane iu oumwi i .. , . -. . - , ... Z . ka. fnnnrl missionaries I lions as mercnants, snippers, DanaerB, eto. vvuvu. ; il j.o . . i. -r .k. ,-u mnnn mmii Ane iasi Australian man eieaiuer wu.uu n different parte of the world Innch more Excellency menoi anairs tnau iuu uumnw,.. u r, - vt:i. .... f. most laymen, at home. J,oi'i stances oompei m.iu u Pp. . - -f- , Jr - hi. bu8ineBB .nnn AIH. In nam rtnaitintifl- ftnn fieiiCH I . - ' . . r"","'."' . " ,7;i k.l,it of mind being tbe negot ation of means for the lm hey acquire a practical hah t of ",,,, 0f laborers to this Kingdon: Lllt.li .H TCI, UC1CI Ul .U ,uv. nui". times they are placed in unexpected dim milieu, where an ignorant or an unprac tical man would De quite iosi. xue Rev. 8. H. Kellogg, of Pittsburg, who has mat been called to be Professor of Theology at the Seminary at Allegheny, went to India as a missionary a dozen Tears ago. He sailed from xfoBton in a sailing ship. On the third day out tl cautuin was washed overboard in a storm . . . ; . instrument uv wnicu uu Le;r i, take mattered broadcast for the healing of the . '. ' V , V. - , ?. : a- ignorance and superstitions of the na- pi. rectos, g. i P" ' , on(. 8nd trlv become a power. her course nunoreas oi umea auu imgut - - , - . knt have gone to the bottom had not this , , J,9 " UhDT young missionary, then just oui o, ine d f hi seminary, been on board, who took charge . . J and made the oa.iy ooBemuone, "f thia Kindom. The cultivation of su- ngTJ ;hof; voyage Toylon Vh.h Kbecoming the Uading industry of lasted five months, and in wbich the distance traversed was nearly half around Donation of laborers to this iungaom from her Britannic Majesty's dominions. The diplomatic qualifications of tbis gen tleman are, already, well Known in America, through his relations in tbe matter of tbe reciprocity treaty, and if bis present mission De equally Buccessiui there will Boon be felt a mighty power here. Ancient sages transmitted to future I .. .. r .ITT" lJ l On the third day out the "'""j .tM.TnTJ instrument by which knowledge may be Troops Bequlred to Hove n Train. 'Wilmsbabre, Aug. 7. An attempt i ... .. . Wanamin fatlinr. IU U.UVV HJIUV .1 .lug . 1, .u-ui.u ..-... 0 1 i iiyeil .uu umm . . wi.wiiai. ui uo, u i n i a 17 . , owing to th strikers uncoupling tbe en- there is a proopRct that we shall compete ry of his eon and his character in detail nina frnrti tViA Ptro iho Rh.riff want ont L.,no.o.rnUv with tha Fnolluh fnr tlmt im. The court then sdioumed until to-mor- to day with United States troopB, and pnrtant market. row morning. The testimony thus far mere was du luriusr inienereuue. Greenback Heeling 1st Hew York. Albany, Aug. 7. Samuel Q. Rice, chairman of the State Central committee of the Greenback party, has issued a circular inviting friends of that party to meet at Rochester. August zj. The Election In France. Paris. Aug. 7. In obedience to In structions of the Prince Imperial, Baron Houssmann will run for the Chamber of Deputies in Ajjaccia, against Prince Napoleon, 7 . ... 1 ., , . " :j The statement of the Citizens' Fire In- Drou8nl oul ,or lne ae,eD" " um surance company of Newark, whose col- ereu Ter" "01'' t lapse was announced on Monday, shoWB Mt. Wermon Memoranda. a deficit of $61,000. M, vrnon. O.. Aug. 7. The controlling interest in the Queen to ths Editor of the Ohio State Journal : Anne's and Kent raUroad has been pur- The Cleveland, Mt. Vernon and Colum. .d Baltfmo;. railradr ' """" epot at Mt. Liberty was set A large number of men paraded the 9n fire 1m ni8ht. by. .ome PerB0M "a' .tta of Shenandoah Mondav night. "own wno maae tbtlt maVe' the globe. Tom Placlde's Harilage. New lork World.l The story of his marriage was roman. tic, his wife being, as was told yesterday, an early love, whom he had not seen for fortv years, and who had been twice mnrriAd and twice widowed in the mean time. She came to New York and stopped at tbe Union Place Hotel, and while there learned that Tom Pla nide was also in the house. A well known New York lady was with her hen aha learned it. who waa an ac quaintance of Placides also. "Why, T)avi. and the other lady told her that sudden changes from one end of the ther- Placide was in straightened circumstances, mometer to the other; but our summer "Bend him to me, won't you?" said Mrs. lasts all the year round. Still, it never . . . . ' 1 I Art nan n nkas Iha hpasan H - t 1 hoc t if a Davie; "there is no reason "J HT"" T " . V shouldn't spend the rest of our lives Philadelphia August. There are schools . . II I ami! nliiinrini kniui n n A snnis nirnlou Art lift I UDgetuer. x nay. yi.uy -k. Bi.. Whv will neSole ine pleasant message was ibu .u - i , cide, and the couple shortly met and b ay in the squahdnen of overcrowded shortly afterward were married. The cities at the East, when these cocoanut marrURe, as was icaroeiy 10 nava vwu f-..-v. exDected under tne circumaianueB, ww wv,iuH6 - The They were dispersed by the authorities damage was slight, the fire being discov-and fortyseven arrested. ered In time to prevent serious loss. A Meridian, Connecticut, dispatch says Militia are still doing duty guarding evCi'T Collector Frank G, Otis Is a ds-1 the tfautmore ana wwo Bridges. nv these islands, and its returns are immense. Men in every line ot Dusmess are greatly interested, aud capital is ready upon every hand. But, alas I men might starve in the vaults of a mint; and so here, tbe safes and banks may overflow with money, but it avails not till intelligent handscan direct the enginery which shall put it in motion. The Government has, therefore, taken up the matter of securing labor, and we bope soon to have an abundance of help for developing our national resources. There is no reason why white men should not come here. Many Scotch and English men are here working in the foundry or at other trades The climate is warm, but not beyond tbe limits ot life and labor, more is no winter with frost, and ice, and enow; no The Last Cremation. Regarding the cremation of the body of the late Dr. Winslow at Salt Lake, Utah, a special to the Chicago limes says : When Dr. Winslow's remains were placed in the cremation furnace at 6:20 o clock, the body weighed 126 pounds. He died on ths 7th of July, and the body had . been embalmed and the heart and bowels taken ont. The crowd were permitted to view the face as the body lay in a plain . coffin, with flowers strewn on it. Nearly , 1000 persons passed around the coffin rapidly, immediately after which the door of the furnace, wbich had already reached a . red heat, was opened, and tbe body quick ly pushed in on an iron plate, the door closed, and the fireman commenced his work in earnest. The furnace was con structed with double flues,ao that the flames came directly in contact with an envelope above the body, a large current of air being admitted. The first appearance, as seen through the mica apertures, was that of roasting; but in twenty minutes nearly all the flesh was consumed, and tbe bones began to crumble, A half hour later very little could be seen of the form of the body. At a quarter to eight Dr. Hamilton opened the door of the furnace, and but one or two pieces of bone could be seen, and they crumbled under the weight of the ashes. The fumes from ths furnace were unpleasantly perceptiblo at a distance from the locality. The cremation was completed in the shortest time on record two hours and thirtyfive minutes. The weight of the ashes, which contained a lew calcined fragments oi Done, was lour pounds and eleven and a half ounces. In connection with ine recent, crema tion of Dr. Winslow's remains at Bale Lake, it may be interesting to know that the society for the introduction of cremation into Germany has paid the sum of fifteen thousand marks to the town of Gotba, to cover the necessary expenses of erecting a cremation apparatus. Strict regulations bave also been pumisnea oy ine poiu-e, uruurmg mc cwiumiuu "j competent medical officers of all the bodies submitted to be burned, so as to pre vent cremation in all cases where the causes of death have not been properly ascertained. In order to etui timber guard against abuse, bodies sent to Gotha from abroad are to be subjected to the same, or even more stringent rules, before being received for the operation. No corpse is to be Durneo unless tne neoeaseu bas expressed a wisn to mat ueu, uu tbe relatives have approveo. n axrantlonallv hanpv one. and Mrs, Placide is stricken with sorrow at her husband's death. California's large foreign trade in fruit and wines Is no mystery, when it is known that she bas 3,800,000 fruit trees and 86.000.000 grapevines, and harvests from 300,000,000 to 500,000,000 pounds of fruit yearly to "come over and help us?" Rates of living, on the average, are about tue same as at ine taai, Some things cost more, others less, In the matter of fuel, though wood is sixteen dollars a cord, the necessities of the climate require so little that tbe bills would be lees than onetounn the cost when wood is four dollars per oord at home. It is only needed for cooking, 4 tbv nbvudajice of Itch., nutritious Tbe I.augu or Women. A woman has no natural gift more bewitching than a sweet laugh. It is like the sound of flutes on the water. It baps from her in a clear, sparkling rill, and the heart that hears it feels as if bathed in a cool, exhilerating spring. Have you ever pursued a fugitive through the streets, lead on by a lair iaugn, now iiere, now there, now loBt, now found 1 We have, and we are pursuing that wandering voice to this day. Sometimes it comes to us in the middle of care and sorrow, or irksome business, and then we turn away the evil spirit of mind. How much we owe to that sweet laugh I It turns prOBe to poetry; it brings sunshine to flowers, over the darkness of the wood in which we are traveling; it touches with light even our sleep, which is no more than the image of death.but is consumed with beams tbat n th ihadgwj of bsaottoUtv,